Homes with Views for Sale in West Valley City, Utah
West Valley City sits on the valley floor and west bench of the Salt Lake Valley, which gives view-home buyers a different angle than what you get on the east side. Instead of looking up at the Wasatch from its base, homes here look across the valley — and that distance is the appeal. From an upstairs window or a west-facing deck in neighborhoods like Stonebridge, Hunter, or the higher streets near 5600 West, the entire Wasatch Range stretches from Ben Lomond down past Lone Peak in one continuous skyline. Sunsets over the Oquirrh Mountains and the Great Salt Lake are the trade-off on west-facing lots, and they're genuinely good most nights of the year.
Pricing is the other piece of the story. A view home in West Valley typically runs significantly less than a comparable property in Holladay, Cottonwood Heights, or Draper, which makes it one of the more practical options in the valley for buyers who want a real mountain outlook without a luxury-tier price tag. Most view inventory here is single-family on quarter-acre lots from the 1990s and 2000s, with a smaller pool of newer builds along the Mountain View Corridor. Proximity to I-215, SR-201, and the TRAX Green Line keeps commute times to downtown Salt Lake and the airport short. Browse the active listings below to see what's currently on the market in West Valley City.
May 2026 · West Valley City market
Live from the Utah MLS — what's actually happening in West Valley City right now.
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Active listings
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Common questions
About homes with views in West Valley City.
What kind of views do West Valley City homes typically have? ▾
Most view homes here look east toward the Wasatch Range, with Mount Olympus, Twin Peaks, and Lone Peak forming the skyline. Properties on the west bench above 5600 West can also catch sunset views over the Oquirrh Mountains and the Great Salt Lake. A smaller number of homes near the foothills of the Oquirrhs get both ranges from the upper floor.
Which West Valley neighborhoods are best for views? ▾
Stonebridge, Hunter, and the newer subdivisions west of Bangerter Highway tend to sit higher and have less obstruction. Homes near the Stonebridge Golf Course often have open fairway-and-mountain sightlines, and two-story houses in Westridge and Copperview frequently get clean Wasatch views from upper bedrooms.
Do view homes in West Valley City carry a price premium? ▾
Yes, but a smaller one than you'd see in Holladay or Draper. Expect roughly a 3-8% premium over a comparable home without a view, depending on whether the sightline is from the main floor, the deck, or just an upstairs window. Unobstructed mountain views from a covered deck command the most.
Will future development block the view? ▾
It's a real concern on the west side, where vacant parcels still exist along 6000 West and near the Mountain View Corridor. Buyers should check West Valley City's zoning map and any pending plats before committing. Homes backing to permanent open space, golf course, or canal easements are the safest bet for keeping the view long-term.
How close are these homes to downtown Salt Lake and the airport? ▾
West Valley sits roughly 10-15 minutes from Salt Lake City International and 15-20 minutes from downtown via I-215 or SR-201. The TRAX Green Line also runs through the city, which makes view-home neighborhoods near Decker Lake and the Maverik Center especially convenient for commuters.
How many view homes are usually active on the MLS here? ▾
Inventory shifts week to week, but West Valley typically has a modest number of active view listings at any time — fewer than east-bench cities but at noticeably lower price points. The listings below update directly from the MLS so you're seeing what's actually available today.